delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, Fannie Norton, then Mrs. Dickerson, while traveling as a passenger in the caboose of the defendant’s freight train, on June 7, 1887, -.received injuries to her person' by the derailment and upsetting of the caboose. She thereupon instituted the present action, and on trial thereof recovered a verdict and judgment for six hundred and fifty dollars, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted by the defendant.
Numerous errors are assigned by the defendant, but the following only are insisted upon in the brief filed
Before proceeding to the examination of the errors thus assigned, it is proper to refer briefly to the evidence, for the purpose of determining' to what extent the rulings assigned as errors were likely to be prejudicial to the defendant in this case. Touching the cause of the accident there was no evidence adduced either by the plaintiff or defendant. The plaintiff’s right of recovery rested exclusively on the fact that an accident occurred, and that she was injured without fault on her part, which, under the decisions, makes out a prima facie case for the passenger. Hipsley v. Railroad,
It will be thus seen that the evidence adduced in the case presents a state of facts which would not authorize us to interfere with the verdict on the evidence alone, if it had gone either way. The plaintiff had a right to rely on her prima facie case, and the jury had a right to find, or not to find, that it was rebutted by the defendant’s evidence. If the testimony of the plaintiff and her physician is true, there is nothing to show that the verdict is excessive; if, on the other hand, the testimony of the defendant’s experts and some of its other witnesses is to be believed, there is ground for holding the verdict excessive.
We do not find in the record any exception properly saved in regard to the overruling of the defendant’s motion' for the examination of plaintiff ’ s person by expert physicians. We may add, however, on that subject that, under the decisions in this state, the defendant has no absolute right to insist on such examination, and that there is nothing to show in this case that the discretion of the court on that subject was abused, even if an exception had been properly saved. Shepard v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 629; Sidekum v. Railroad,
The defendant asked twenty-five instructions, sixteen of which the court gave, and nine of which the court refused. We will not enter into the detailed
On plaintiff’s behalf the court instructed the jury, in estimating plaintiff’s damages, to allow her, among’ other items, “necessary expenses for medical attention, and medicines, for nursing, care and support, while disabled.” There was no evidence that the plaintiff had either paid or incurred any definite amount for expenses on either of these heads, and as the verdict of the jury must be based on evidence, and not on conjecture, that part of the instruction was clearly erroneous.
The counsel for plaintiff in his closing argument to the jury, among others, made the following remarks: “ Another thing, gentlemen of the jury, that I desire to call your attention to, and it is this : Under the law of this state, railroads of the class of this defendant are allowed to charge four cents per mile for all passengers. Now you all know that it is not worth anything like four cents per mile to do their passenger business, that is to say, it does not cost the defendant four cents per mile to do their passenger business. The law has allowed them to charge this excess in order that they may accumulate a fund to pay just such claims as this for injuries to their passengers.” Which statement was at the time objected to by the defendant. Also the following remarks: “ There is another thing in this case that does not look
These remarks were objected to at the time when made. The first the court permitted to pass unrebuked, and the second it positively sanctioned. Touching the impropriety of both these remarks there can be no question. They concerned facts which had no bearing whatever on the issues, and evidence touching the first would have been ruled out, if offered, and was actually ruled out in regard to the other. We held in Gibson v. Zeibig,
At the same time we must add that, if this were the sole ground calling for a reversal of the judgment, its reversal would be of doubtful propriety, since the matter is not shown by the bill of exceptions, but only by affidavit of counsel for the defendant, filed in support of his motion for new trial.
The affidavit, it is true, is not contradicted, and its truth is substantially conceded by the statement and printed argument of counsel for the plaintiff. But the rule in this state is that improper remarks of counsel are matters of exception, and should be shown by the bill of exceptions, and not brought to the attention of the trial court by affidavits filed in support of motions only. Roeder v. Studt,
As the judgment must be reversed on account of the error in the instruction above recited, we may suggest that the questions touching the conductor’s sobriety on the occasion of the accident, which in no possible or conceivable way bore on the cause of the accident, be omitted on a retrial of the cause.
With the concurrence of Judge Thompson, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
